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Imagination Commanded Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: True worship comes from within, and is dependent upon a sanctified imagination. The Second Commandment is a call to forsake the dependence upon the sensual and climb to the higher level of spiritual worship.
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Back in the 60's eight wrestlers took their own lives because
world champion 37 year old Gohlam-Rexa committed
suicide. Three of them left notes saying they could not stand
the death of their idol. Almost every time a well-known
person takes their own life some of their worshipers do the
same. Idolatry is alive and well in our world today. We are
deceived if we think idolatry is not a modern problem. It is
one of the most common sins of our day.
So often we connect sin with sex, as if sex was the major
area of human sin, but in the Ten Commandments that is
number 7 on the list while idolatry is number 2. From God's
perspective idolatry is a greater danger than immorality
because idolatry is the cause for immorality. Men would not
be so immoral if they did not idolize sex.
When man takes a real but relative value, and makes it
absolute, he perverts it. That is why idolatry is mans
greatest problem, for by it he ruins, destroys, and perverts
all of the good things of life. By absolutizing the relative, or
by putting the good in place of the best, man distorts reality
and lives a life out of balance with the laws of God. True
faith is faith in the truly ultimate--it is faith in God.
Idolatrous faith is a putting of ones trust in some finite
reality which has been raised to the level of the ultimate.
If sex, science, the state, society, or superstars are made
the ultimate values in our lives, they become idols. The
result will be we will take these valid values and turn them
into monsters of evil, for nothing can be God but God
without leading men into one kind of hell or another.
There has been some progress in the history of idolatry.
Modern man is not quite so conspicuous about it. He no
longer bows before idols of wood and stone. He has become
far cleverer in disguising his worship. The poet reveals one
area of this higher level idolatry.
The heathen in his blindness
Bows down to wood and stone.
The Christian in his wisdom
Bows down to gold alone.
Man has become more sophisticated in his folly. His
idolatry is on a level that sometimes is almost noble. The old
gods have been destroyed and their temples burned.
Centuries ago, Edwin, the ruler of Northumbria in Britain,
accepted Christ and called for an uprising against the useless
gods in the temple. The high priest galloped towards the
temple in the sight of all the people, and he hurled a lance
into the interior where the idols were. When this sacrilege
remained unpunished, the people at the command of this
daring challenger of the gods proceeded to overthrow and
burn the temple. These days of the glorious overthrow of
visible idols are over, but the battle against idolatry
continues in full force.
Erich Fromm, a social scientist, in his book, The Sane
Society, writes, "Is it not time to cease to argue about God,
and instead to unite in the unmasking of contemporary
forms of idolatry? Today it is not Baal and Astarte but the
deification of the state and of power in authoritarian
countries and the deification of the machine and of success
in our own culture."
William Jennings Bryan pointed out long ago that some
forms of idolatry are on such a high level that they produce
good, and that is why we are blind to their dangers. The
man whose god is gold is often very industrious, zealous, and
clever, and we praise him for these qualities which lead him
to his success in his idolatry. The man who worships fame
and does his best to attain it may do much good for the state
and community. Therefore, we respect his form of idolatry.
We are impressed with any form of idolatry that succeeds,
and so we tend to idolize success. As we study this
command, therefore, we must recognize it is Gods Word for
us today and not just a record of His Word to others of the
past.
Like the First Commandment, this one has a negative and
a positive side to it. And, again, the Old Testament
emphasis is on the negative, whereas, Jesus emphasized the
positive. The negative must come first, however, for as we
said on the First Commandment, all other gods must be
eliminated before concentrated devotion can be given to the
one true God. So also, sensual idolatrous worship must be
eliminated before man can worship God truly in spirit and
in truth. Let's consider the negative first which-
I. PROHIBITS IDOLATROUS OR SENSUAL WORSHIP.
Idolatry is basically the worship of the visible and,
therefore, God prohibits any image of any likeness of